Scroll down to catch up on what happened this morning and to find out more visit www.hull2017.co.uk.

Take a look

11:39

Thanks for joining us

Thanks for joining us this morning.

To find out more about this year’s Turner Prize and how you can see it in Hull visit our website.

11:37

When the winner will be annouced

The winner of the Turner Prize 2017 will be announced on Tuesday, December 5, during a ceremony in Hull, broadcast live on the BBC.

The members of the Turner Prize 2017 jury are:

Dan Fox, writer and co-editor of Frieze Magazine

Martin Herbert, British writer and critic based in Berlin

Mason Leaver-Yap, a curator, editor and writer based between Glasgow and Berlin

Emily Pethick, Director of Showroom in London

The Jury is chaired by Alex Farquharson, Director of Tate Britain

Alex Farquharson, director of Tate Britain, said: “It is all looking superb and everyone has done a great job.

“There is a real dialogue between the Turner Prize works and those on The Ferens own collection.

“We have had incredible success since we first took the Turner Prize out of London and integrating it into a gallery’s own collection is a first for us.

“Some people have commented on being surprised there is a lot of painting in the exhibition. People assume the work will be unfamiliar and shocking but that is not what the Turner Prize is about.”

11:34

A huge honour for the city

Martin Green thinks hosting Turner Prize is a huge honour

Martin Green, Director of Hull UK City of Culture 2017, said: “In a year that continues to exceed expectations, the Ferens hosting Turner Prize 2017 is another feather in the cap for Hull. The four artists in this exhibition have contributed to a timely show that asks important questions about the world and the society we live in. Our ambition is that it will get people talking as well as drawing audiences from across Hull, the rest of the UK and much further afield.”

City council leader Steve Brady

Councillor Stephen Brady, Leader of Hull City Council, said: “The gallery has had a phenomenal year so far and the public have embraced fully our visual arts offer. Hosting the UK’s most prestigious art prize strengthens the gallery’s reputation as one of the finest regional galleries in the country.”

11:25

When you can see the artwork

The exhibition will be open to the public from tomorrow and will be in residence until Sunday, January 7.

It is free to visit.

It will be open between Monday to Saturday between 10am and 5pm. On Thursdays, Ferens will stay open until 7.30pm.

On Sundays, you can visit between 11am and 4.30pm.

Ferens Art Gallery to host Turner Prize

11:20

Lubaina Himid

Lubaina Himid is nominated for her solo exhibitions Lubaina Himid: Invisible Strategies at Modern Art Oxford and Navigation Charts at Spike Island, Bristol, as well as for her participation in the group exhibition The Place is Here at Nottingham Contemporary. For Turner Prize 2017 she presents four distinct works, which include painting on Guardian newspaper and found ceramic. Her work is a celebration of Black creativity and the people of the African diaspora; it addresses hidden and neglected cultural contributions made by real and forgotten people.

Rosalind Nashashibi

Rosalind Nashashibi is nominated for her solo exhibition On This Island at The University Art Galleries at UC Irvine’s Claire Trevor School of the Arts, California, and her participation in Documenta 14. For Turner Prize 2017 she presents two films, Electrical Gaza 2015 and Vivian’s Garden 2017, which use a range of techniques that merge documentary with scenes that are scripted and staged. She focuses on the tactile lived experiences of relationships through incidental details to draw attention to the overlooked elements of everyday life. Although often intimate, the films also touch upon issues of surveillance and control.

Andrea Büttner

Andrea Büttner is nominated for her solo exhibitions Andrea Büttner: Gesamtzusammenhang at Kunsthalle Sant Gallen, Switzerland, and Andrea Büttner at David Kordansky, Los Angeles. For Turner Prize 2017 she presents a range of work encompassing woodblock prints, etchings and paintings. Her work explores fine art, craft and design histories. Subjects include shame and embarrassment and the relationship between aesthetics and ethics.

The nominees

Hurvin Anderson is nominated for his solo exhibitions Hurvin Anderson: Dub Version at New Art Exchange, Nottingham, and Hurvin Anderson: Backdrop at the Art Gallery of Ontario, Canada. For Turner Prize 2017 he presents a selection of vibrant paintings, a number from exhibitions for which he was nominated as well as new works. He paints places that he hopes to see and remember, as well as those he hopes will surprise him. By drawing elements familiar to him and those newly discovered, he reworks and combines images to create a unique sense of place.